Sunday, April 26, 2015

What is a
hyperpolyglot? Someone who knows many languages. But how many? Six? Eight or
more? Eleven? Or even 30? And what does “know” mean? Being able to speak,
write, read and listen like a native speaker? Being able to talk about daily
matters? Having a basic conversation? Just saying a few words? Or…?

In Babel No More by
Michael Erard, Erard travels around the world to explore what it really means
to learn a language, how the brain deals with language, and how you can learn
many tongues. He meets researchers, neuroscientists, people who know many
languages, and others, and he visits multilingual groups, such as in India.

He shows how our view
of language in general and multilingualism in particular has changed over time.
Erard writes, “Go back to prehistory, a time of linguistic wildness, when we
can imagine that each roving band of humans grunted its own dialect, and
uncountable versions of half-congealed speech codes could be overheard at every
cave and watering hole. Any one of these codes had a range, not a center nor an
edge; not until bands clashed, merged or partnered and settled into villages
did they acquire a physical place, a homeland. Over thousands of years, these
became city-building empires that swept many languages away. On borders and in
cities, people spoke several languages…so did everyone in geographically isolated
places where trading and navigating required knowing the languages of one’s
equally isolated neighbors. All this was endangered, thousands of years later,
in the era of the nation…monolingualism became the standard model in most
places, because the boundaries of the nation were drawn to include all the
people who spoke alike. This unity was threatened by multilingualism and its
taint of barbarity, impurity and unnatural mixing.” (p. 90)

And now, he adds, many
counties just want one national tongue. I live in England, where there are
people from all over the world, but English is the only language most people
know. Young people might study other languages, but not seriously. “Politicians
lectured Britons on learning languages so they could get jobs in the European
Union, while universities removed foreign-language requirements and shut down
language departments when enrollments dropped. Further, the government was
constantly exporting English teachers, textbooks, courses, and programs,
helping the country to earn £1.3 billion a year. In other words, learning
language was for citizens of other countries-who would then compete with
Britons for jobs. The irony was underscored by the fact that by 2005,
immigrants had transformed London into a place where at least 307 languages are
spoken, making the capital of one of the most monolingual countries in the
European Union the most multilingual city on the planet.” (p. 71)

In other countries
that Erard visits, such as Germany, a number of people want to learn multiple
languages. But why? Some because it’s fun or a challenge, while others need to
for work. Still others want to understand how language works, so they see
learning languages as a sort of course in linguistics. Others learn many
languages in order to have many selves. Erard interviews some people who
dedicate their whole lives to learning languages, sometimes even to the detriment
of their jobs or families.

But how many languages
can you really know? Erard suggests we have too high expectations for our language
skills. You’ll never speak another language like a native. “If you want to be
better at languages, you should use native speakers as a metric of progress,
though not as a goal…Embrace your linguistic outsiderness-it’s the way of the
world…A language isn’t reserved for the perfectly calibrated native speaker.
Words have currency even if they’re not perfectly wrought.” (p. 261)

He also offers advice
from hyperpolyglots: “Some studies of successful language learners have
suggested that they’re more “open to new experiences” than the rest of us…we
have a self that’s bound up in our native language, a “language ego”, which
needs to be loose and more permeable to learn a new language. Those with more
fluid ego boundaries…are more willing to sound not like themselves, which means
they have better accents in the new language.” (p. 238)

So have the courage to
continue with your language studies and to dare to speak other tongues, even if
you think you’re not that good at it!

Most of us will never
know 15 or 30 languages. But it’s fun to read about them and to learn from them
in Babel No More.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

The sign language interpreter for Melodifestivalen (the Swedish run-up to Eurovision), Tommy Krångh, has rightfully made the news recently. His interpretations of pop songs in the contest are fantastic; they’re moving and theatrical. I’m so glad we all can have a chance to see them and learn from them, and I’m also glad that they are bringing new awareness to sign language interpretation. Check out some of his work here and read about him in this article.

About Me

Originally from Chicago, I lived in southern Sweden for nearly 5.5 years, and moved to southern Wales in September 2006. I completed a Ph.D. translation studies in June 2009 at Swansea University, with a dissertation on the translation of children's literature.
Now I live in Norwich, England, where I am a lecturer at the University of East Anglia, and I also work as a translator, writer, and editor.
Contact me at bravenewwords (AT) gmail (DOT) com.